255932_not-searchable
/en/natur-og-miljo/statistikker/avfbygganl/aar
255932
Negligible increase in waste from building activities
statistikk
2016-05-25T10:00:00.000Z
Nature and the environment;Construction, housing and property
en
avfbygganl, Waste from building and construction, trade waste, waste treatment, recovery, incineration, landfill, construction, rehabilitation, demolitionConstruction , Waste , Construction, housing and property, Nature and the environment
true
Statistics show waste material distribution, waste treatment and total amount of waste generated by building activities in Norway on a yearly basis. The statistics form part of the complete waste accounts for Norway.

Waste from building and construction2014

Content

Published:

Negligible increase in waste from building activities

In 2014, there was a very small increase in the generation of waste from new constructions, rehabilitation and demolition activities compared to 2013. In total, 1.87 million tonnes of waste were generated in 2014 from different building activities, of which 55 per cent was sent to material recycling.

Generated waste amounts from construction, rehabilitation and demolition of buildings. Tonnes. Main groups.
TonnesPartChange in per cent
2013 - 2014
2014
Total, construction activity1 866 947100.02.6
Construction629 25833.71.4
Rehabilitation566 77730.4-9.8
Demolition670 91335.917.8

Over one third of waste from demolition activities

Thirty per cent (567 000 tonnes) of the total waste generated from building activities in 2014 came from rehabilitation activities. New construction activities generated 34 per cent (629 000 tonnes) and demolition generated the remaining 36 per cent (671 000 tonnes). Heavy building materials; mainly bricks and concrete, constituted about 43 per cent of the total waste. This includes 22 000 tonnes of slightly polluted concrete and bricks. Mixed waste constituted 17 per cent, while asphalt and wood waste made up 13 and 14 per cent of the total waste generated respectively. The amount of hazardous waste has also increased since 2013. The main fractions were materials contaminated with waste containing impregnated wood.

Large share of waste sent to waste handling facilities was recycled

The vast majority of the waste contains materials that are relatively uncontaminated and can be disposed of at landfills or reused without special environmental considerations. Some building materials do, however, contain hazardous substances, which must be properly treated.

The Waste Framework Directive in the EU (valid in Norway under the EEA agreement) sets a target of 70 per cent material recovery for non-hazardous waste from construction and demolition by 2020. It can be assumed that sorted waste materials such as metal, paper and plastics are sent for material recovery, whilst the wooden waste is most probably used for energy recovery. Waste used for backfilling operations is included in the target for material recovery.

The statistics on waste treatment are based on information from a sample of waste collectors in Norway. Fifty-five per cent of the waste was sent for recycling. Thirty one and eleven per cent of the waste was sent for energy recovery and deposit respectively. Most paper, metals, glass, gypsum, brick, concrete and other heavy building materials and EE waste were sent for recovery.

Uncertainties remain in the figuresOpen and readClose

The quality of the data used as a basis for the statistics is improving. The greatest uncertainty is attributed to the demolition of buildings due to the low quality of data for the area.